Cézanne, Paul

Mont Sainte-Victoire

Another panoramic view,
of a delicate, tranquil beauty. Admirable is
the thought of opposing to the distant landscape the high tree in the
foreground, a form through which the near and far, the left and right,
become more sharply defined, each with its own mood and
dominant. Breadth, height, and depth are almost equally developed; the
balance of these dimensions is one of the sources of the fullness and
calm of the painting. We experience the vastness of the space in the
broad valley with the viaduct; we feel the equivalent depth in the
long, endless passage from the house in the foreground to the mountain
top; but we also measure the great height of the space in the central
tree which spans the whole vertical dimension, crossing every zone of
the landscape and reaching from the lower to the upper edge of the
canvas.

The contrast of the vertical and horizontal is tempered by the many
diagonal lines which are graded in slope through small intervals. The
central, almost vertical tree is one of a series of trees more or less
tilted, and the most inclined trunk approaches the slope of the
mountain and the strong diagonal of the road. But this road, too,
resembles in its sinuous form the long silhouette of the mountain,
which in its lower ranges and foothills gradually settles into a pure
horizontal, like the distant viaduct. The transition from vertical to
horizontal through many small changes of axis is like the gradations
of color which span the extremes of warm and cool, light and dark, in
tiny intervals to create the opaline delicacy of the whole.

With so many diagonals, there are none that converge in depth in the
usual perspective foreshortening. On the ground plane of the
landscape, Cézanne selects diagonals that diverge from the spectator
towards the sides of the canvas and thus overcomes the tension of a
vanishing point, with its strong solicitation of the eye. In the roof
in the foreground, he has run together the gable and ridge as a single
slope, parallel to the diagonal paths, in defiance of perspective
rules. The depth is built up by the overlapping of things and through
broad horizontal bands set one above the other and crossed by the
vertical tree and the long diagonals. The play of color contrasts is
also a delicate means of evoking depth. The same deep green in the
foreground plane of the tree is contrasted with a strong ochre below
and the light vaporous blue of the sky above. Reddish tones on the
upper tree trunk pick up the rose of the mountain peak, but are set
against a darker blue tone than the sky. The contrast of warm and cool
shifts gradually from the foreground couplings of green and yellow to
distant couplings of blue and rose.

The brushwork is among the essential beauties of this painting and is
worth the most careful attention. It is perfectly legible and frank, a
sober, workmanly touch--and through its countless shiftings of
direction and size is a Iyrical means, senstitive to the tiniest
changes in the visual stress of the forms and colors, their modeling
and accents.